Creative Commons license icon

Feed aggregator

Gonna be starting an Adult Furry-themed game of Mafia, and you guys are invited!

Furry Reddit - Tue 13 Mar 2012 - 19:39

That's right! I'm starting a game of Mafia on the Furoticon forums, and I'm wanting to get as many people involved as I can to make it a great game!

For those of you who don't know, Mafia (or Werewolf as I've seen it called) is a social game of deception and lies. See this handy flash file for more info.

You will have to sign up for the forums to participate, but that's all! Thanks again for considering <3 It'll be a FUN time if I can get a lot of people involved :D

Sign up here.

submitted by captainbozo
[link] [7 comments]
Categories: News

I knew I liked thinkgeek for a reason

Furry Reddit - Tue 13 Mar 2012 - 14:53
Categories: News

Re: SpongeBob's Downfall (A Fan Perspective)

alt.fan.furry - Tue 13 Mar 2012 - 02:45
TMC wrote:

I never got into SpongeBob, so I can't comment on that, but I just
hope that's not the fate of My Little Pony: Friendship is Magic :^(

Ron

Categories: News

Is He Cool, or What?

In-Fur-Nation - Tue 13 Mar 2012 - 01:53

This May it’s time for the return of everyone’s favorite lasagna-loving feline with attitude.  Comic book writer and well-known critic Mark Evanier takes up a pen this time to bring as a new full-color Garfield comic book from Boom! Studios’ Kaboom! imprint.  It helps, of course, that he was one of the writers of the Garfield & Friends animated TV series back in the day. This time around the art duties are handled by Garfield comic strip cartoonist Gary Barker. Check out the pre-order information at Kaboom’s web site, which also shows one of the variant covers of the premier issue.

image c. 2012 Jim Davis / Kaboom

Categories: News

owo 10 Hours of My Life Gone

Furry Reddit - Mon 12 Mar 2012 - 23:35
Categories: News

Episode 35 – Giant Crying Kyo - The second of our unusually dense cluster of podcasts is ready to go! We’ve got all sorts of good stuff going on, ranging from the con report to ridiculous scavenger hunt tomfoolery, from Dragon Ball Z / Princess Bride [...

Fuzzy Logic - Mon 12 Mar 2012 - 23:31
Twitt

The second of our unusually dense cluster of podcasts is ready to go! We’ve got all sorts of good stuff going on, ranging from the con report to ridiculous scavenger hunt tomfoolery, from Dragon Ball Z / Princess Bride crossovers to the nature of pie, and that’s before we even get into the e-mails! Once we do get going, we cover our six e-mails! There’s discussion of escapism and moderation, the ability to change one’s own life, Kyo being possessed and his breasts falling out shortly before he absolutely loses it for about a solid minute, an update on Marcus Noble’s uncle, relationship trigonometry, questions about convention etiquette, and so much more!

This coming week’s topic is about self-perception. How you see yourself, what you want to improve about yourself, your best attributes, and so on! Let us know who you see when you look in the mirror, and tell us if you need a bit of a hand in gaining some perspective. For that matter, let us know if you need any assistance overall; we’re here to help, after all!

For the sake of spacing, our next episode will be recorded on Thursday as usual, and will be posted on Saturday, March 17th. After that, we’re back to our normal schedule!

(Also, don’t worry about the podcast title. A bit of an inside joke!)

Twitter: fuzzylogiccast
FA: fuzzylogicpodcast
E-mail: fuzzy.logic.podcast@gmail.com
iTunes: Fuzzy Logic Podcast

Download:
Episode 35 – Giant Crying Kyo
File modified March 13, 2012 – 80.2 MB – downloaded 467 times so far

Episode 35 – Giant Crying Kyo - The second of our unusually dense cluster of podcasts is ready to go! We’ve got all sorts of good stuff going on, ranging from the con report to ridiculous scavenger hunt tomfoolery, from Dragon Ball Z / Princess Bride [...]
Categories: Podcasts

Picture request?

Furry Reddit - Mon 12 Mar 2012 - 20:48

Hello, all! First time posting on r/furry, so dont get on my ass if I violate any rules whatsoever. I would like to make a request for a picture, but, alas, I have nothing to return for it. If anyone is interested in creating a picture for me, free of charge, please comment or message me. Many thanks in advance.

submitted by Mr_Meow
[link] [2 comments]
Categories: News

Anyone here into Baseball? I'm organising a furry Fantasy Baseball League, and am looking for furries to join it.

Furry Reddit - Mon 12 Mar 2012 - 19:45

Inspired by talks with Atimist, I've decided to try organising a fantasy Baseball league for us furries. It'll be running on Yahoo!'s fantasy league system, using Rotisserie scoring. I've not decided if the draft will be Auto Draft or Live Draft, and if it's Auction or taking turns, but I need at least 4 teams for a draft, with a maximum of 12. I already have me and Atimist, so that makes 2.

If anyone else is interested, please send me a note on Reddit, and I'll send you a link to the League and a password.

submitted by TheLupineOne
[link] [8 comments]
Categories: News

Daft Furrys

Furry Reddit - Mon 12 Mar 2012 - 19:44
Categories: News

Laika Believes: A cyborg space dog Metroidvania

Gaming Furever - Furry Game News - Mon 12 Mar 2012 - 18:12

laika

Yes, you read that right. Laika Believes is a game in development by Minicore Studios that features Laika, a dog that has fallen from the stars; a dog that spoke, that was clad in silver metal armor, and was armed with mysterious weapons. The premise of the game is that the Soviets have become the supreme rulers of the Earth, with small resistance movements trying to make a stand, but being unable to do so without some "supernatural" force.

The game is being developed for XBLA and PC, as of this posting.

'Laika Believes' is a classic Metroidvania platformer, featuring: (from the website)

  • Massive, nonlinear levels that model the layouts of real locations in a way as of yet unseen in other platformers
  • Large, choice-rich skill trees that let players approach the game how they want to
  • A novel defensive mechanic that lets players turn the firepower of Laika's enemies against them
  • Smoothly flowing, fast-paced shooting action
  • A story of struggle and hope, full of twists and revelations
  • Rich, evocative art depicting a world overgrown by a technologically ascendant Soviet empire
  • Secrets and rewards hidden in every corner for the determined player

laikaconcept

Concept Art

Source

 

Categories: News

Furries have ruined me.

Furry Reddit - Mon 12 Mar 2012 - 17:36
Categories: News

TigerTails Radio - Season 6 - Episode 29 - Why Is IRC Dead?

TigerTails Radio - Mon 12 Mar 2012 - 16:00
More Blockbusters, as DeeJay joins TK, Hedgie and Eeve3 in the studio as Xavier is off being very ill and infecting everyone with the plauge. Marvel at the chaos and fun as we attempt to get through some segments without Xavier there to keep us in check. In Blockbuster this week TK and Eeve3 team up as the Blue Team while DeeJay tries to save some face for the White Team after White's destruction at the hands of Salamander3 and Floating Lime last week. Aside from Eeve3 talking about the latest Zelda on the Wii, there was no Done and Dusted this week.. Starring TK, Eeve3, and DeeJay. TigerTails Radio - Season 6 - Episode 29 - Why Is IRC Dead?
Categories: Podcasts

Animal Farm

[adjective][species] - Mon 12 Mar 2012 - 13:00

Animal Farm is George Orwell’s 1945 classic novel.

Orwell is considered to be one of the great authors and Animal Farm, along with Nineteen Eighty-Four, is considered to be one of his masterpieces. It is about talking anthropomorphic animals that overthrow their human farmer master and run the farm on their own terms.

I recently re-read Animal Farm with the idea that I would review it for [adjective][species]. I was planning to conclude that it’s a great book, and a great furry book, and that all furries should read it.

I have re-read Animal Farm, but I’m not recommending it: don’t read Animal Farm. Read something else.

I don’t think that Animal Farm a furry book. Which got me thinking about what constitutes a furry book.

I’ll try to define what a furry book is later, but let’s look at Animal Farm first. It has many qualities that might make it attractive to a furry audience:

  • Animal Farm is not complex or difficult to read. Its full title is “Animal Farm: A Fairy Story“, and it’s written in a very deliberate children’s storybook style. The writing is magical in its clarity, akin to Dr Seuss, J.K. Rowling or Philip K. Dick.
  • Animal Farm is short: you can start and finish it in a single sitting. It took me a couple of hours.
  • The animal characters are fully realized and easy to empathize with.
  • Many furry readers will appreciate that the only romance in the book is homosexual, between Benjamin the donkey and Boxer the horse. In line with the writing style, the relationship is chaste and friendly, and would perhaps be better described as homosocial, a bit like Bert and Ernie of Sesame Street. Still, Benjamin and Boxer are devoted to one another and are inseparable to the point that they plan to retire together.

And yet I don’t think it’s a furry book.

Why? For starters, I think that furry is escapist by nature.

Furry books tend to embrace an alternate universe. Makyo touched on this is some detail in his Layers of Fantasy post earlier this year. He pointed out that furry art tends to exist in this context:

It is a sort of stacking of different layers of fantasy, with our focus on anthropomorphic animals being layered atop science fiction or fantasy elements.

Makyo goes on to point out that this isn’t a rule that applies to all furry art, and that the alternate-universe concept falls over when we furries socialize in the real world. But I think that furry does necessarily involve some disconnection from the real world, if only to accommodate our self-images as animal people. I understand that this point is arguable (and please do comment away).

I think that a real-life furry gathering is always different from a non-furry group. The alternate names; the blasé acceptance of ears and tails and fursuits; the non-traditional treatment of sexuality, and;- most importantly – the implicit acceptance that each of us are the being that we feel we are on the inside. I’m an anthropomorphic horse; RandomWolf is in a funny mood because there is a full moon; Bob is just a friendly human who likes Thundercats.

I think that furry books reflect the furry community, in that the community is disconnected from the real world. As furries, we want to escape – however marginally – from the real world. We create our own reality.

Animal Farm, despite its talking animals, exists firmly within the real world. It is allegorical, not fantastical. I wouldn’t recommend Bulgakov’s The Master & Margarita as a furry book either.

Animal Farm is an allegory of the Russian Revolution. It retells the story of Russia and the USSR from around World War I through to the last years of World War II. The primary porcine protagonists – Major, Napoleon and Snowball – are respective literal analogs for Marx, Stalin and Trotsky. Animal Farm is no fairytale: there is no redemption, no success. The farm, following revolutionary overthrow of the despotic Farmer Jones, charts a course back to corrupt dictatorship as straight as an arrow.

The children’s storybook language is key to the book’s power and testament to Orwell’s genius. The language primes us to expect and hope that our farm animals will earn themselves a better life through hope and struggle: we’ve read storybooks before. We expect conflict and dark times, but we also expect redemption or at least an engaging Brothers-Grimm-style grotesque coda. But there is no hope for our animals. They are as doomed under the pigs as they were under Farmer Jones.

As well as escapism, a furry book will often employ a literary device where species is shorthand for behaviour. (Cheetahs are fast; foxes are vain; bulls are strong.) This does occur in Animal Farm to an extent – for example we have a strong horse, a lazy cat, and a grumpy donkey – however like the characterization of the pigs, this is meant allegorically. That is, Orwell explores the fates of the Russian people against their (respectively for my three examples) loyalty, work ethic, and cynicism.

To put it more directly: Animal Farm doesn’t explore speciation as a philosophical idea in the way that a furry book does.

I wrote about Gulliver’s Travels a few weeks ago using this as the key “furry” idea. Swift’s rational horses and animalistic humans and are intended to disconnect our rational nature from our atavistic selves. In doing so, he asks us to consider what it means to be human, a question close to the heart of many furries (and, of course, [adjective][species]). I’d recommend Gulliver’s Travels to any furry interested in exploring the idea of identity.

Another example: The First Book of Lapism by Phil Geusz deals with the philosophical aspects of identity and species. Geusz imagines a world where people voluntarily transform themselves into bunny-people in the hope of creating a pacifist and highly-socialized race. Guesz’s books explore the consequences of this new race in an accessible alternate-universe manner. Speculative fiction isn’t personally my cup of furry tea, but Guesz’s works are well written and beloved by many.

Animal Farm is a work of genius and was a very important book when it was published in 1945. History is important, but the Russian Revolution is less relevant in our post cold-war world. And if a version of Animal Farm were published today as an allegory for conflict between the Western and Islamic worlds, I still wouldn’t recommend it as a furry book.

  • Animal Farm by George Orwell is widely available for around £7. It is not available for download in the US. Recommended for furry European history buffs.
  • The First Book of Lapism by Phil Geusz is available for £11.30 paperback / £3.22 pdf ebook. Recommended for furries who enjoy speculative fiction and/or bunnies.
  • Gulliver’s Travels by Jonathan Swift is available to download for free from Project Gutenberg. Recommended for everyone.
  • The Master & Margarita by Mikhail Bulgakov is widely available in every format for around £5 or less. Recommended for anyone who has read the complete works of Fyodor Dostoevsky.